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Pope Leo XIV is set to embark on a significant journey across four African nations starting Monday. This marks his fourth international tour since assuming the papacy in 2025, and it takes him to a continent where the Catholic Church is experiencing rapid growth.
Interestingly, the itinerary does not include Nigeria, Africa’s most populous country, where many believers have faced persecution. Instead, the Pope’s tour kicks off in Algeria, a nation with a predominantly Muslim population.
Dubbed “A Pilgrim in Africa” by the Vatican, the trip will focus on key issues such as peace, migration, environmental concerns, youth, and family. Pope Leo XIV is scheduled to deliver 25 speeches across the continent, addressing audiences in French, English, Portuguese, and Spanish.

Pope Leo XIV will begin his visit to Algeria on April 13, 2026. (Fateh Guidoum/AP Photo)
Experts and religious leaders emphasize the trip’s significance for Africa. Rev. Daniel Male, secretary of the Union of Augustinian Friars of Africa, shared with the Religion News Service, “I believe the Holy Father is walking with the African church in the context of the global church.” He noted, “He is acknowledging the growth and vibrancy of African churches while emphasizing the church’s commitment to the poor and marginalized.”
The Catholic OSV News echoed this sentiment, stating that the visit underscores efforts for peace, acts of mercy, and the thriving presence of the Catholic Church across Africa.
The National Catholic Register stated that in 1910 Africa was home to less than 1 million Catholics. The latest figures available for 2024 estimate there are now 288 million.

Thousands of Catholics greeted Pope Francis when he visited Kinshasa, Congo, in February 2023. (Jerome Delay/AP Photo)
Commenting on his absence from Nigeria, Frans Cronje, African-based analyst at the Yorktown Foundation for Freedom, told Fox News Digital, “Given Nigeria’s role as the epicenter of the terror threat faced by Africa’s Christians, it will be disappointing to many of them to learn that the pope has left that country off his Africa agenda. The country has become ground zero for the global Islamist terror threat.”

Pope Leo XIV delivers the Urbi et Orbi blessing — Latin for “to the city of Rome and to the world” — at the end of Easter Mass in St. Peter’s Square at the Vatican, Sunday, April 5, 2026. (Alessandra Tarantino/AP)
The pontiff must be invited to a country by the host government. Analysts say the government of Nigeria may feel a papal visit may be too sensitive at this time. But the Nigerian government did not respond to requests for comment on this issue by Fox News Digital.
Details of the trip include:
Algeria: April 13 to 15
The Vatican’s yearbook for 2025, the Annuario Pontificio, states Catholics number 8,740 out of a population of 46–48 million. The pope is believed to be coming to Algeria to visit the ancient city of Hippo, now called Annaba. The city was home to St. Augustine, the “doctor of the church.” Pope Leo is the first pontiff to belong to the Augustinian Order.
He is also expected to emphasize interfaith dialogue with Islam when he visits the Great Mosque of Algiers. This is one of the biggest in the world, capable of accommodating up to 120,000 people.

Algeria prepares for visit of Pope Leo XIV. (Fateh Guidoum/AP Photo)
The 2026 Open Doors World Watch List placed Algeria in the 20th position for Christian persecution. It said 47 churches of the Protestant Church of Algeria (EPA) have been closed by the authorities.
The Associated Press reported that Algerian authorities rejected a Vatican request for Leo to visit Médéa to pray at the Tibhirine monastery, the place where seven French Trappist monks were kidnapped and killed May 21, 1996, by Islamic extremists during the country’s civil war.
Cameroon: April 15 to 18
The Catholic EWTN organization reports that Catholics make up between 30% and 35% of the population of some 30 million.
The pope will preside over five public Masses and addresses in three cities. He will also meet with vulnerable children at the Ngul Zamba Orphanage in the capital city of Yaoundé.

A local sits beneath hanging Catholic devotional scarves and banners outside Our Lady of Fatima Parish, a church identified as one of the sites expected to be visited by Pope Leo XIV during a planned trip to Luanda, Angola, April 12, 2026. (Cesar Muginga/ Reuters)
Angola: April 18 to 21
In the latest government census, some 56% of Angola’s population identified as being Catholic.
The most significant part of the pope’s visit to Angola is expected to be when he goes to the town of Muxima, where he will pray at a shrine to the Virgin Mary, known locally as “Mama Muxima,” or “mother of the heart.” This is said to be the spiritual home for many Angolans, drawing over 2 million pilgrims every year.

Pope Leo XIV will visit Angola in April 2026. (Marco Longari/AFP via Getty Images)
Equatorial Guinea: April 21 to 23
The Vatican has stated that approximately 80% of the population of Equatorial Guinea are Catholic. Leo will hold several Masses and addresses, and will visit a new psychiatric hospital and a prison. The Jean Pierre Olie Psychiatric Hospital in Sampaka, Malabo, was only inaugurated in December and is the country’s first modern specialized mental health facility. It collaborates with France’s Hospital Saint-Anne in Paris.
In a potentially controversial move, the pope will also visit a prison in Bata notorious for reports of inmate torture and abuse.
The Vatican did not respond to Fox News Digital questions by press time.